The Arizona Coyotes' future isn't now.
It might not be next season either.
There's no disguising what they're doing as they build from the ground floor. With three picks among the first 29 in the 2022 NHL Draft and 18 in the first three rounds in 2023, 2024 and 2025, this is a total rebuild focused on developing as many elite prospects as possible.
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The Coyotes made no major offseason additions despite having plenty of space under the NHL salary cap ($82.5 million). They led the NHL with 50 regulation losses last season and were 31st with 57 points and a .348 points percentage ahead of the Montreal Canadiens (55 points, .335).
"We haven't shied away from telling everybody in the world that we're trying to acquire draft picks," Arizona general manager Bill Armstrong said.
A youth movement takes time, and the Coyotes have a group of age 26-and-under forwards who have proven they can score in the NHL. They also want a tough-to-play against, don't-take-a-shift off attitude they plan to carry over from season to season.
"We want to be a competitive, hard-working team," Armstrong said.
A primary storyline going into this season isn't just the Coyotes' style of play, but where they'll play. They left Gila River Arena in Glendale, Arizona after 19 seasons and will play at least the next three at Arizona State University's brand-new 5,000-seat multipurpose arena. They're negotiating to build a new arena and entertainment complex in nearby Tempe, which wouldn't open until the 2025-26 season at the earliest.
"I'm going in with an open mind. I'm excited," said forward Lawson Crouse, who signed a five-year contract Monday to avoid an arbitration hearing scheduled for the same day.
Until then, the Coyotes hope the intimacy of the college arena gives them a home-ice advantage unlike any other in the NHL. There will even be a section for ASU students.
"Hopefully, the fans come out and it's sold out every night and they're loud, and it's a good atmosphere for us and for the team," forward Clayton Keller said.
Keller is 24 years old and the centerpiece of the offense after scoring an NHL career-high 28 goals in 67 games last season before breaking his leg against the San Jose Sharks on March 30. He's expected to be ready for the season opener at the Pittsburgh Penguins on Oct. 13.